We would live in a world of generality. In fact, every particular person, place or thing in the world would suddenly cease to have meaning. 'Aristotle the great philosopher' would become 'aristotle the uncapitalized, stupid philosopher'.
The correct capitalization would be "Did your astronauts land on the moon?"
From both the spelling and capitalization in your question, I would suspect you are not.
this sentence would read, "Rewrite this sentence using correct capitalization holidays in November" hope that helps
No, capitalization would not be necessary.
No, "your" should not be capitalized in the sentence "girls night with your mom" as it is a possessive pronoun describing a relationship.
You always want to begin a new sentence with capitalization
Notre Dame is the correct capitalization of the school.
The first letter of the first word in a sentence should always be capitalized. Additionally, proper nouns like names of people, places, and specific titles are also capitalized. Other words in a sentence are typically lowercase unless they fall under specific grammar rules.
It could be that strict capitalization rules haven't been enforced to them.
the second one!!
The capitalization guide at the back of my dictionary lists 20 rules for capitalization.
After the fourth quarter of 2013, Apple's market capitalization was $500 billion. The market capitalization has steadily increased with the release of Apple's flagship product of the iPhone.